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“I don’t want a saint,” I say. “I want truth. And breakfast.”

His laugh is genuine. He dips his head and kisses my forehead—gentle and precise. It slides into me like a promise I didn’t know I wanted.

We clear the plates together, like two people who have done it before. He dries; I stack. There’s a world where this is the whole story: eggs, laughter, a man washing a pan with sleeves pushed up while I lean against the counter and talk about darts and bustles. That world doesn’t exist for us. But in this room, for a slice of the morning, it does, and I decide to keep it.

“Thank you for the machine,” I say, nodding upstairs.

He glances that way. “You’re welcome,” he says.

His phone sits face-down on the counter. It buzzes once, then goes still. He doesn’t pick it up.

“What happens next?” I ask.

“Next you show me the machine so I can pretend I understand it. Then I make calls in the office and keep you where I can see you. Tonight we spend the evening together. If you want.”

“If I want,” I repeat. The choice is real. I can hear it in his tone.

“If you want,” he says again, a contract sealed with repetition.

I rinse my mug and set it in the rack, then wipe my hands. I turn back and lean my hip into the island.

“I want to sit at your desk and sketch while you work,” I say. “I want to pretend I’m not listening and listen anyway. I want the names of Clara’s guards by the time I text her this afternoon.”

“Bolton and Ortiz,” he says quickly. “You’ll meet them soon.”

I smile.

He reaches out slowly, so I can throw a flag if I need to and tucks a loose piece of hair behind my ear. His fingers linger at my jaw for a second too long. The ribbon is soft at my wrist.

“Truth,” he says quietly.

“Truth,” I echo.

We stand there in the warm kitchen lit brightly by the snow outside and let the morning be slow.

He’s still who he is. I’m still who I am.

I think of the baby.

“Teach me,” he says, glancing toward the skillet, his mouth turning into a crooked grin.

I hand him the whisk and stand behind him, my arms coming around his waist, guiding his wrist through steady circles. “Gentle,” I say. “Confident. Don’t scramble. Coax.”

“Coax,” he repeats, doing exactly what I tell him. For once, the man who commands every room he enters lets himself be taught.

It lands warmer than it should. It lands exactly where I need it.

CHAPTER 29

CASSANDRA

Damien’s sleeves are still rolled up, his forearms flexing as he wipes down the skillet again with a precision that’s almost comical.

All I can do is watch and admire. There’s something about the way he does things that pulls me in, makes me drool a little.

“Careful,” I say, nudging his hip with mine, “you’ll polish that pan into oblivion.” He glances over, his mouth twitching in that quiet way that feels like a secret just for me. The morning has been perfect. It’s intoxicating.

His eyes catch mine and the air shifts. He sets the skillet down, palms pressing into the marble island. I feel the weight of his gaze like a touch.